Bangkok Post

Macron shows bare-breasted Liberty to Saudi prince at Louvre

- ADAM PLOWRIGHT

French President Emmanuel Macron likes to pepper his diplomacy with symbolism and gestures. By taking Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman for a tour of the Louvre, was he making a point about political freedom?

Macron spent an hour on Sunday night taking his Saudi visitor around one of the highlights of the current Paris cultural diary: a new exhibition by the revolution­ary 19th-century French painter Eugene Delacroix.

The two men later dined together at a restaurant at the museum, spending two hours in talks that were expected to have covered wars and crises in the Middle East, as well as sources of friction between the leaders.

“The president wanted to host him for a private dinner at the Louvre, a top French cultural destinatio­n, on the occasion of the launch of the Delacroix exhibition,” an aide to Macron told reporters on Monday.

Delacroix was “known notably for the famous painting of Liberty Leading The People”, the aide stressed. To underline the point further, Macron later tweeted a picture of him and Prince Mohammed in front of the giant canvas.

The giant oil painting was a risky choice for the heir to the ultra-conservati­ve Saudi royal family that until recently banned mixed-gender concerts and imposes a strict body-covering dress code on women.

Liberty is depicted as a bare-breasted woman holding the French tricolore.

But the deeper message is highly political: Liberty is shown heading over the barricades in an image inspired by the July Revolution of 1830 that saw protesters overthrow the inept ruling French royal, Charles X.

“It’s an allegorica­l and revolution­ary painting that promotes the republic,” Francois Gere, a historian who is head of the French Institute for Strategic Analysis, said.

He added that the Louvre visit was in keeping with Macron’s intellectu­al approach to diplomacy and stressed a message about France’s cultural power as well as political reform to the 32-year-old Saudi visitor.

Prince Mohammed, considered the de facto leader of the oil-rich kingdom, has begun a series of social reforms to spread a more moderate version of Islamic law in his country.

The Delacroix painting “is the action of the people, it’s about liberty and the union of all the classes around that. It’s saying, ‘You’re a reformer, you want to transform your society, I’ll show you something that might interest you’,” Gere added.

A source in the Saudi delegation said the visit was proposed by Macron’s office after Prince Mohammed cancelled a proposed trip to Marseille for a different cultural event.

The tour of the Louvre chimed with one of the main themes of his threeday trip to France, the source added, which is increasing cultural co-operation between the two countries that will see them work on a new Saudi orchestra and opera.

“What communicat­es the idea of cultural co-operation better than the Louvre?” the source said on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to speak to the media.

 ??  ?? Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, left, and French President Emmanuel Macron, second right, at the Louvre in Paris on Sunday.
Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, left, and French President Emmanuel Macron, second right, at the Louvre in Paris on Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand